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Where the Moors Held Sway, Allah Is Praised Again
amatullah
10/24/03 at 13:16:38
The following is an article on a new Masjid founded by European
converts in Garanada, the last stronghold of Muslim Spain.

There is also a new Madresa that has been established in Spain. It will
teach mainly Hanafi and Maliki Fiqh and traditional Islamic spiritual
arts. It is designed by the British Muslim architect, Abd al-Latif
Whiteman.

1) Article on the New Madresa:
http://www.alzawiya.net/spain_madrassa.htm

2)Abd al-Latif Whiteman's website:
http://www.cwdm.co.uk/index.html

----------------------
3) The New York Times article on the new Masjid in Granada
URL:http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/21/international/europe/21GRAN.html


October 21, 2003
GRANADA JOURNAL
Where the Moors Held Sway, Allah Is Praised Again
By CRAIG S. SMITH

RANADA, Spain — Muslims are back in this ancient Moorish stronghold,
the last bastion of Islam in Spain before the 15th-century emir Boabdil
kissed King Ferdinand's hand and relinquished the city with a legendary
sigh.

But the row of men kneeling in prayer at the city's new mosque, the
first built here in more than 500 years, are not modern-day Moors; they
are well-educated European converts.

"We've come to offer society the only alternative that exists to lead
it out of chaos," declared one of the community's founders, Hajj
Abdulhasib Castiñeira, a tall, bearded Spaniard in a glen plaid jacket and
suede brogues.

While immigration is gradually spreading Islam across Europe, a
homegrown movement is giving it added momentum in Spain, where a generation of
post-Franco intellectuals are reassessing the country's Moorish past
and recasting Spanish identity to include Islamic influences rejected as
heretical centuries ago.

The movement has its roots, not in the austere Islamic fundamentalism
that dominates popular Western imagination these days, but in the Beat
Generation and the hippies who pursued spiritual quests to Morocco when
it was a counterculturalist Mecca of sun, sand and cheap hashish.

There, a young patrician Scot, Ian Dallas, converted to Islam. He
eventually changed his name to Sheik Abdalqadir al-Murabit and returned to
Britain, where he began gathering Western converts, who became known as
the Murabitun.

The movement is marked by his proselytizing vision, which strives
ultimately to found an Islamic caliphate with an economy based on gold
dinars. A handful of Spaniards accepted Islam under his tutelage on the eve
of Franco's death and returned to Córdoba to start an Islamic
community there.

Religious conversion has a long tradition in Spain, a land as close to
Muslim North Africa as to the rest of Christian Europe across the
Pyrenees. During 800 years of Islamic rule, many Christians converted to
Islam. After the Christian reconquest, Muslims were forced to convert to
Christianity.

"All of this makes Spanish people more prone to accept Islam," said Mr.
Castiñeira, sitting on a sofa outside his small office in the hillside
mosque.

The new Muslims attracted leftist intellectuals looking for spiritual
alternatives to the strict Catholicism that dominated life under Franco.
Spain's Muslim converts now number in the tens of thousands, though
many of the new Muslims no longer follow Sheik Abdalqadir.

The converts may be divided by interpretations of Islam, but they
insist their faith is not driven by nostalgia for an idealized history. "We
reject the romantic idea of a return to the Islam of the past," said
Malik Abderrahmán Ruiz, a Granada native who converted in 1992 and is
the community's emir. "We've created a new community of this place and
this time."

Granada has about 15,000 Muslims today, mostly Moroccan and Syrian
immigrants and North African students who worship at three nondescript
Muslim prayer rooms in different parts of town.

But the town's 1,000 or so converts are very significant, Mr. Ruiz
said, because they give Islam a voice that cannot be ignored. Granada's
Islamic Council, for example, has been lobbying to stop annual
celebrations of the fall of Granada into Christian hands.

Mr. Castiñeira joined the original Spanish converts in Córdoba and
became a Muslim in 1977. Later, at an Arab leadership conference in
Seville, Granada's socialist mayor encouraged him and other Muslims to move
to the city.

"He said if we ever build a mosque, it should be in Granada because the
last stronghold of the old Muslim community should be the first of the
new," Mr. Castiñeira said.

Eventually a small group of converts settled in the city's old Moorish
quarter, Albaicín, looking across at the Alhambra, the medieval
Moorish citadel that for centuries was the center of Islamic power on the
Iberian peninsula. They found land for a mosque and in 1981 Mr.
Castiñeira and another convert embarked on a trip to the Persian Gulf, hoping to
gather the $10,000 they needed to buy the land.

They accepted contributions from Libya, Morocco and even Malaysia, but
much of the financing came from the Emir of Sharjah, one of the rulers
of the United Arab Emirates. They say they rejected any support offered
with strings attached.

By the time the financing was in place, though, Granada's socialist
mayor was gone and local opposition kept the project from going forward
for 20 years.

Across Europe, plans to build mosques have met resistance in
traditionally Christian communities, where people worry that the growth of Islam
is changing the character of their towns. In Berlin, for example,
construction of a mosque has been stopped because its minarets were built
higher than the local government approved.

But nowhere, perhaps, has a mosque stirred as much emotion as in
Granada, where the location, across a ravine from the reddish-brown ramparts
of Islam's last stand, carries unmistakable symbolism. At one point,
the city offered Mr. Castiñeira and his colleagues a building site in an
industrial zone on the outskirts of town.

"Political lobbies have done everything they could to stop this
mosque," he said, adding that a core of "right-wing Catholic families"
continued an expensive legal battle against the mosque until the end.

The mosque was scaled down to half its proposed size and the height of
its Spanish-style minaret was cut down to satisfy local demands. Even
then, the Muslims were asked to first build a full-scale model of the
minaret to reassure the neighborhood.

Today, the whitewashed brick mosque blends seamlessly into the
increasingly gentrified neighborhood. Hundreds of tourists visit the garden
each day and Mr. Castiñeira said a few people convert to Islam there each
week.


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